You know what fries my taters about stuff like this? When the pendulum swings back (and it always does) the shmucks back in office will get this overturned.
I still remember the jet gun thing the military used for injections. I got a bunch of shots when I went to Turkey. I hated those things, but not as much as one of the guys that flinched when he was getting a shot. The highly-pressurized liquid grazed the outside of his upper arm instead of going in. He started bleeding and they quickly put gauze and pressure on it to stop the bleeding, and then took him away.
Nothing like seeing that when you are in a line of dozens of people waiting for your own shots. Fortunately they stopped using that in the early '90s.
Ha! I assumed they were still doing it that way. What do they do now?
Side note: I recall some in my group having issues with the shots, and me thinking they were wimpy. Now I know about adverse reactions to that crap. wish I'd been thinking more back then.
As far as I know, they are doing the shots via syringe now. The shot guns would often get splashback blood onto the gun, and it could transfer to the next person in line.
You know what fries my taters about stuff like this? When the pendulum swings back (and it always does) the shmucks back in office will get this overturned.
Will the pendulum make you take two Flu vaccines in a row?
I agree, but you're looking at a 50 year pendulum swinging right now... I imagine your concern is years out.
That is a big win.
Excellent!
Cancel the contract with phiyzer
One of the reasons I’m glad my son isn’t interested in the military…. I remember lining up for all those shots.
Not sure if those are covered here, but i see it as a step in the right direction
I still remember the jet gun thing the military used for injections. I got a bunch of shots when I went to Turkey. I hated those things, but not as much as one of the guys that flinched when he was getting a shot. The highly-pressurized liquid grazed the outside of his upper arm instead of going in. He started bleeding and they quickly put gauze and pressure on it to stop the bleeding, and then took him away.
Nothing like seeing that when you are in a line of dozens of people waiting for your own shots. Fortunately they stopped using that in the early '90s.
Ha! I assumed they were still doing it that way. What do they do now?
Side note: I recall some in my group having issues with the shots, and me thinking they were wimpy. Now I know about adverse reactions to that crap. wish I'd been thinking more back then.
As far as I know, they are doing the shots via syringe now. The shot guns would often get splashback blood onto the gun, and it could transfer to the next person in line.
Oh, fun…
Their revenue pipeline shrinks again!
Flu is parasites. Ivermectin and zinc will destroy it.